Religious School

Religious School Hours: Students age three through 8th grade meet on Sunday mornings from 9:45 a.m. to 12 p.m. High School students meet from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. Please enter through the front entrance on Sunday mornings.
Hebrew School Hours: Students in grades 4-6 will meet on Tuesdays or Wednesdays as scheduled between 4 and 6 p.m. Hebrew classes begin on September 26-27.
Religious School 2017-2018: Find Registration materials. These include the following:

Questions? Please contact us at (260) 744-4245 or office@TempleCAV.org for membership information or with questions about our school. Religious School Chair Wendi Wallet, Principal Leah Hadashi, and Rabbi Lenny Sarko also are available to discuss your child's education.

Meet Our New Principal

Religious School teacher Leah Hadashi brings her enthusiasm for Judaism and Jewish education to a new role this fall as principal of our learning program for Temple youth ages 3 through high school.

As principal, she’ll serve as chief administrator for our Sunday and weekday Hebrew program, working with Rabbi Lenny, Religious School Committee Chair Wendi Wallet, and our teachers to ensure an enriching Jewish education for students. In addition to this new part-time position, Leah will continue teaching children in grades 6-8.

“I am passionate about Jewish Education because I see the value a positive early experience can have on a person as they grow older,” Leah said. “I want the education that the students receive here at CAV and the experiences that they partake in to stay with them and help to build the solid base that they are able to stand on as strong and proud Jewish adults.”

Leah began teaching in our Religious School in late 2010, including students in second grade through b’nei mitzvah. She and her husband, Shai, have four children. Originally from West Lafayette, Leah made Aliyah in 1999. She and Shai lived in Ramat Gan for three years before moving back to the States.

The Religious School at Congregation Achduth Vesholom seeks to provide an enriching learning experience that engenders a deeper, more purposeful appreciation of our students' spiritual heritage.

Our aims and objects:

To implant in our students and their families a feeling of belonging to the Jewish community.

To teach Jewish values, traditions, history and culture.

To create meaningful Jewish experiences for our children so that Judaism becomes a positive intellectual and emotional experience that brings pleasure, beauty and joy of life.

To strengthen and reinforce Jewish associations within the lives of our young people so that the TEMPLE and HOME become the centers for Jewish life and values.

Tzedakah Program

At Religious School, our children's weekly education includes the recognition of Jewish responsibility and helping others in need in the community. Weekly collections of Tzedakah taken in each classroom on Sunday morning give each child the opportunity to put this knowledge into action. Please encourage your child to share his or her good fortune by giving from his or her allowance. Funds will be allocated during the school year as students learn about places and people in need.

Our Religious School

Achduth Vesholom's ReligiousSchool offers comprehensive educational programming for children from preschool (age three years) through 12th grade. Our objectives include teaching our students Jewish values, traditions, history, heritage, and way of life. We want to create a meaningful Jewish experience for our children so that Judaism becomes a positive intellectual and emotional experience. We also want to strengthen and reinforce Jewish feelings, associations and fellowship. We utilize the Union for Reform Judaism's CHAI Curriculum.

Basic Hebrew is part of the comprehensive religious school program. We use the URJ's Mitkadem Hebrew program. Additional Hebrew classes are required for bar/bat mitzvah candidates. Confirmation marks an educational milestone for young people in the 10th grade. Post-Confirmation classes are offered to students in grades 11 and 12.

Our high school program for students in grades 9 through 12 meets on Sundays, covering topics relevant to their lives as Jewish teens and young adults. Field trips, Confirmation class trips, retreats, and teen trips to Washington and Israel also have broadened our students' view of the Jewish world, along with our close association with Goldman Union Camp Institute (named for the late Myron S. Goldman, a former Temple president).

Our 169-year tradition of meaningful Jewish education in Fort Wayne has been fostered by the hard work and dedication of teachers, rabbis and educators. Check out our library, too.

Questions? Contact us at (260) 744-4245 or office@templecav.org.

Weather Cancellations

Religious School: In the event of inclement weather, a calling tree will go out to all families, teachers and aides no later than 8:30 a.m. on Sunday morning.

Hebrew School: If Fort Wayne Community Schools are closed due to weather, then we will not have Hebrew School. If the weather gets bad later in the day on Tuesday or Wednesday, a calling tree will go out to all Hebrew School families and teachers no later than 4 p.m.

As always, please use your discretion regarding the weather. You and your family's health and safety are always the top priority.

Family Education

The goal of the Temple's Family Education program is to provide tools for integrating Jewish customs, observances and rituals into a student's home. Family education attempts to provide a level playing field for both parents and children in our school and give a basis for family celebrations of holidays and life-cycle events. Discussion revolving around faith issues and the role of Judaism in family life (both historically and with current relevance) will provide parents an opportunity to participate in various discussions without having to initiate them. Family Education Programs occur approximately 2-3 times per year in grades kindergarten through 8th grade.